Our first trip! It was very exciting and a bit nerve wracking to finally set off on our first trip away in the van. We headed to Kent in South East England.
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Leeds Castle
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Our first stop was at Leeds Castle. The castle grounds are beautiful, with a little stream, fields of bluebells and daffodils, and peacocks, ducks and geese. The castle itself is smaller than you might expect but has some impressive features inside, and is an active, lived-in castle, which was really interesting to explore. The dog collar museum also on site however….
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Leeds Castle |
We then pushed on to our first campground, Homing Park in Whitstable. Turned out that we were actually there a day before they opened for the year but they were good enough to let us in! We walked along the sea front to the Sportsman, a pub-restaurant recommended to us by David and Justine. It was fabulous- three courses of gorgeous, indulgent food and wine! Highlights include the Thornback ray, Slip sole and apple sorbet with pop rocks! Whitstable itself is a lovely little quaint town. The number of optometrists and dentists hints at a bit of a retirement town but there are an equal number of gorgeous gift shops and deli’s. The waterfront is also very picturesque and I imagine it’s heaving in summer. We also visited Whitstable castle, a stately home built by a former resident to house his mistress- oh la la.
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Waterfront at Whitstable |
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Canterbury Cathedral |
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Canterbury with cathedral in the background |
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Ruins of St Augustine's |
From here we headed to Canterbury where, after a terrifying series of extremely narrow roads, we arrived at a quiet site. We stayed here two nights while exploring Canterbury and it’s churches. The first we came to when walked in to town was St Martins Church, which is the oldest continually operating church in the English speaking world (!), having been built in the year 597. Loved the “squint”, an angled hole in the external wall to allow lepers to follow the service!
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Ruins of St Augustine's
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St Martin's Church |
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Outside of Canterbury Church |
Just along from this are the ruins of St Augustine’s Cathedral, where we joined the English Heritage Group- quite the joiners aren’t we?! After lunch in Canterbury town we explored Canterbury Cathedral. This is a huge, seriously impressive church. Outside the corners are decorated with carvings of saints and inside there are gracious pillars and enormous, ornate vaulted ceilings. The stained glass windows are particularly impressive.
Out on the east coast of Kent we visited the Richborough Roman Fort, or rather the ruins of. The remaining walls date back to the year 275 and inside these are remants of the fort, which date back to the roman invasion of 43! Crikey.
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Richborough Roman Fort ruins |
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Our spiritual homeland! |
From there we drove to Sandwich, another very pretty little retirement town with very narrow lanes and sloping houses. Sandwich does a fine pub dinner, roast lamb with buckets of gravy (and yes Jane finished it all!) and the biggest piece of fish ever!, and we found a gorgeous little deli on No Name Street to stock up. Nom nom.
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The name says it all really! |
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Deal Castle |
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Self portrait in front of Deal Castle |
We then headed out to the eastern coast of Kent, first stopping at Deal Castle. This is a seaside fortification which is shaped like a flower when seen from above, but inside is much more business like than other castles we’ve seen. The audio guide was the most boring ever!
The White Cliffs of Dover were something I’ve always wanted to see, and they were as grand as I’d hoped and actually made of chalk! The view down towards Dover and the ferry terminal is a bit of a shame in comparison. We explored Dover Castle on a miserable gray day in the bitterly cold wind. The tunnels offered some respite and were very atmospheric- spooky. The castle itself is very plain and verging on ugly. Inside though they’ve done a good job of recreating the look of the period. The Roman Pharo (lighthouse) and adjacent church are lovely.
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Dover Castle |
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Inside Dover Castle Church |
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Church and pharaoh at Dover Castle |
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White Cliffs of Dover |
We decided to skip Dover town and headed down the coast to Hythe. The town church houses an ossuary, which in a bit of good luck, was open due to a team of visiting osteologists. There was a good collection of skulls and bones but even more interesting (geek alert!) were the displays of pathological bony specimens. It was really neat to see the pathological correlate of the conditions I see on x-rays.
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Hythe Ossuary |
The following day we visited Sissinghurst Castle….which was mostly closed. The grounds are lovely though, with lots of spring flowers and some lovely oast houses. This marked the end of our first trial run in the van, although we spent just one night at David and Justine’s (thanks again!) before heading off for Morgan’s surprise birthday weekend………..
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Crooked as |
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To the cloy of cod? Ha ha |
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